Curatorial Projects

photographers:network

selection 2007 - "patience"

Masaki Hirano, Tokio, Japan

Masaki Hirano: Stump E, from the series: „down the road of life“, 2001
Masaki Hirano: Stump E, from the series: „down the road of life“, Epson Print, 2001, 70x70cm, open edition

Tasmania

 

is an island that is located on the south coast of the Australian continent.

Most of the magnificent temperate old growth forests are getting cut down to export raw materials to Japanese paper companies in the name of the tree-planting program. That means that the local logging monopoly logs old growth forests and replant trees as if it is sustainable and earth-friendly.

Surprisingly, this practice is not “illegal”. Even more amazingly, Japanese citizens who use all the paper production, mainly as computer papers, are not aware of the fact that they use 90 % of the wood chips produced in Tasmania.

Due to the combination of cross-border corporations’ continued attitude of profit before principle and ignorance of on the part of consumers, old growth forests will be converted into plantations in a few years.

Only the Tasmanian Wilderness, UNESCO list of world heritage, and a few other primitive areas secured May 5th, 2005 by the Tasmanian people after many years of effort will remain. The only way to protect Tasmania’s ancient ecosystem of these iconic forests is to change the structure of consumption, quick profit and Japanese consumer ignorance.

The immense forests will disappear into the past changing the earth forever.

As the plantations goes on, the wild animals will change, so will the insects, microbes and soil until the rivers and the oceans have broken the chain.

As the chain goes, so do the souls of people.

There is not much time left to protect the few remaining Tasmanian native forests from greed and ignorance. Now all the data tells us that the delicate balance of the nature is being disturbed. Our “Mother Earth” is neither as vast nor sturdy as we believe.

We must stare at the present moment in order to know the past.

The present moment is the embodiment of the past.

We must stare at the present moment in order to know the results of the future.

The future will be decided by our means of living at this moment.

I am trying to stand firmly in the present moment that connects the past the future with “Down the Road of Life”

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